Best Buy's Geek Squad: Conquest of Branding Over Competence

Warning - Using the Geek Squad May Be Harmful to Your Computer

By Joel Hirschhorn, published Jul 31, 2006
Published Content: 93  Total Views: 163,302  Favorited By: 20 CPs
Rating: 2.9 of 5
Face it, the brilliance of  American business is not perfecting quality of products and services, it is in marketing, advertising, and branding.  That is what the Geek Squad is all about.  They have niffty language, make their agents wear uniforms and drive the cutest little cars covered with advertising.  They say that: "Our mission is to alleviate the world's computer problems, educate people to fearlessly embrace technology and practice the art of human interaction."  Sounds so noble.  Their real mission is to make money, which is just fine if their services were top quality.  But my own experience and that of many others who have shared their pain on many Internet sites is that the youthful Geek Squad agents have nice personalities but lack technical competence.  The result is that when customers expose their prized computers to their agents, because they need technical help, they put themselves at risk.

Computers have become so crucial in our lives and when things go wrong it is like becoming seriously ill.  So naturally your instinct is to seek professional help.  But the Geek Squad does seem to adhere to the wisdom of health professionals: first do no harm.  

One of the Geek Squad's standard services is called data transfer.  Simply put, copy data from an old computer to a new one.  For that they charge plenty.  So what might be the worst case scenario or nightmare of having the Geek Squad come to your home to perform this job.  Think a minute.  What happened to me is that they destroyed the hard drive of my old computer and I lost the hard drive in it and, worse yet, lost over five years of all kinds of data and files.

And an interesting aspect of the Geek Squad business model is that if something bad happens and you have to bring something into a Best Buy store they do not allow their agents to physically take anything back to their store.  In my case, I had to take back my old computer box, wait several days and then learn that they had destroyed my hard drive and data.

Best Buy's Geek Squad: Conquest of Branding Over Competence

Incompetent screw-ups or helpful service?

Takeaways
  • Computer problems? Beware of the Geek Squad.
  • Best Buy may have good prices, but their Geek Squad should be deleted.
  • Never be fooled by slick language, the Geek Squad is all talk.
Did You Know?
Nothing is worse than losing a hard drive with years of important data and files; so getting good computer technical help is like finding a good surgeon.
Resources
  • Never Mind the Clip-On Ties, Geek Squad Can Fix Your PC found on  NYTimes Online.Father Dan: Why Best Buy and Geek Squad Suck found on Daniel Curran.com
Comments
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Wow, I thought it was just me. Yes Dell, Best Buy and The Geek Squad are all worthless. My new Dell computer was only about 5 weeks old before it crashed. I called Dell, they took all the information, only to tell me that The Geek Squad was my authorized warranty service and gave me a toll free number. They (GEEK) took all my information, put me on hold for several minutes, came back and said for $299, we will BLAH< BLAH< BLAH=Bullcrap. The computer is 5 weeks old and under warranty and you are gonna charge me to even look at or diagnose it. I was livid and ticked. I hung up the phone, went back to the black screen, hit F1 key and whola, it booted up. It works right now, but everytime I do a re-start, I have to hit the F1 key etc. I will not buy another computer from Best Buy and one way or another I will get my revenge from them. Dell, Best Buy and the GEEKS suck royally. I bet you that if I go in today and try to speak to an associate and act like I am buying a computer, t

Posted on 07/13/2008 at 8:07:46 AM

 
Working with and now on the GS I have to say that a lot of these issues are due to problems that are either hard to address, or dumb/lucky consumers. Bringing in your computer claiming its broken and you have idea how to fix it then expected the guys behind the bench to be able to find and fix EVERY problem the FIRST time they look at it is rediculous. We do our best to make sure your stuff works, and we don't skip steps. we take notes on everything we do, run tests on all parts - and assuming you don't get a lazy/incompetent employee it always works out. I have had many cases where someone over looked something by accident, and we fixed it before it made it out the door. Your iPod busted? We can't do anything inside the store. we HAVE to ship it out. if it won't turn on after we test power and functionality and you manage to beat it back alive later means what? you got lucky and it MAY just happen again? Most complaints against the service stem from bad luck, and GS warranties its

Posted on 06/21/2008 at 3:06:53 AM

 
Oh, I feel for you. I just got ripped off by geek squad when my dell computer's hard drive went bad. I phoned dell tech and they told me to take it to best buy geek squad cuz I bought the computer there. Dell authorized best buy geek squad to do repairs on their behalf. Since I only had the computer for 2 months the warranty will cover it as told by dell tech. To my surprise, geek squad charged me 140.00 for the repairs/replacement of hard drive. I had to pay in order to get my computer back. After I got home, I immediately contacted dell and was told that my computer is under warranty. I than told them about what best buy geek squad did. They replied with a no comment but kept assuring me my computer is under warranty. Dell will not touch your computer if you bought it at best buy. I did not know this until later. Best buy will do whatever they want cuz dell will not back up their warranty. Those 2 companies must have a deal with each other that does not benefit the co

Posted on 05/31/2008 at 6:05:06 PM

 
Took my 3 yr old computer to a Best Buy Geek. I thought it was the power pack, bingo, new power pack hooked up worked. However, no boot up, so he told me the mother board was fried. Walked out with a new computer plus hold one. took old one to a friend, he replaced the powerpack and PLUGGED BACK IN THE HARD DRIVE. Bingo, computer now works. Moral of the story, DON"T TRUST A GEEK

Posted on 04/27/2008 at 4:04:53 PM

 
The first time I used a Geek, he used words and phrases intended to humiliate me for having lesser computer knowledge than he. The second time I used a Geek he entered my home with condescending arrogant vicissitudes that resulted in my asking him to leave my home. The third time I used a Geek was at the Best Buy store. He informed me that it would only take 20 minutes for my request if I brought the computer in. Within 30 minutes I was back with my computer at which point he told me it would take an hour and a half. I waited two and a half hours for his call. When I returned to the store to see if he had finished, I found my computer ready to go and no attempt had been made to inform me of it's completion. Best Buy has got to quit placing Geeks on pedestals. They are all arrogant, unsocial ticks.

Posted on 04/22/2008 at 9:04:45 PM

 
took my 300$ ipod to sprngfld mo. geeksquad for 29$ analysis & was told it was dead: postively! advised to throw away as it was absolutely useless. after totally amaturish tinkering it worked!!! no dead harddrive, no dead battery; as they had said. on their report sheet they included new ipod prices. dirty tricks!!! i wont go back.

Posted on 04/07/2008 at 5:04:13 PM

 
Does ANYONE back ANYTHING up? A blank DVD costs what? 20 cents? Data loss although a very un-wanted problem, lies with the customer. However, Geek Squad has had its share of ignorant technicians. I would not associate my name with them. As for the drive, I would have checked the jumpers before simply saying, it was dead. Or even a different controller card or used recovery software to see if the drive was really dead.... Alwel

Posted on 12/26/2007 at 4:12:40 PM

 
THE MOTHERLOAD OF ALL ISSUES WITH GEEK SQUAD........ REGARDING THE STORE IN CHESAPEAKE,VA I have had a hell of a time getting my laptop serviced from geek squad. First of all we live an hour and a half a way from the nearest best buy store. I work two jobs and my wife just had a baby so the only way that we could get our laptop shipped off for service was to have her drive up to the store in chesapeake with our new now four month old baby to get the laptop sent away for service. We had to service it because it was not getting adequate power and shutting down all of a sudden. Plus it drained the battery. The first time my wife got up there and the "bright" technician basically looked at it and said, "well I don't know what is going on with it so we will have to ship it off." Basically wasting my wife's time as well as having a screaming baby in the car. Doesn't make for a fun day. We get a call saying it was fixed so she drove back up there to pick it up the next week.

Posted on 09/30/2007 at 1:09:00 PM

 
omg im going to be a geek squad guy i cant believe they dont check the hardware first( http://digg.com/videos/educational/Geek_Squad_gets_Busted_2 ) cuz its EZer and faster to fixed a hardware problem then a software one. i hope best buy will learn and change there rules cuz they WONT let Geek Squad open the pc until after checking the software LMAO that the opposite of what they should do but hey i need the money bad with any luck i can at least get the store im working at to change that rule

Posted on 09/21/2007 at 12:09:00 AM

 
I actually had a guy just like Jdude (05/06/2007) tell me that same stuff when i went to get a new router and he couldnt find any wireless routers in the store then i went and showed the tech manager the LinkSys website and he told me that he was sorry that the guy doesnt know computers that well. Then he found the wireless router gave me a discount on it

Posted on 09/21/2007 at 12:09:00 AM

 
actually Jdude (05/06/2007) maybe right about w/e router that was but some routers dont work with vista and/or the router manufacturers dont support it like one time i had a LinkSys wireless router(maybe 6-24 months old) and i couldnt get it working 100% and LinkSys told me that that router doesnt have support for vista

Posted on 09/21/2007 at 12:09:00 AM

 
Wish I saw this before I paid them $59.00 for a (mis)-diagnosis, another $440 for a new part, and $39 to install new (wrong) part. Then they told me I would have to send to Sony for repair. Sony charged me $757 to fix the real problem. Best Buy / Geek Squad are a rip-off.

Posted on 09/11/2007 at 8:09:00 AM

 
Now, you don't seem like somebody who knows how to run a business, so let me point something out to you - carrying your computer back to the store for you is a liability that Best Buy's insurance company probably doesn't cover, hence their inability to take the PC with them. Now, you say you lost 5 years worth of data from that drive - so I'm gonna guess that the old computer was five years old. Does it REALLY seem unreasonable to you that a hard drive could fail after five years of use? I work in the industry, and I've seen drives fail under a fraction of that time. Blaming it on the Geek Squad is certainly convenient - but the only person here at fault is you, for failing to keep your precious data backed up. I hope you learned your lesson, and are doing backups regularly.

Posted on 08/31/2007 at 2:08:00 AM

 
So, let me get this straight. You ask a technician to remove a hard drive from your computer to transfer the data, and somehow the data gets lost. I do not understand how you somehow missed the possibility of data loss in this situation. Oh right - you're not a technician. Now, the one point I will give you is that the technician should have alerted you of the risk of data loss prior to removing the drive. But then again, if you had any common sense, your five years worth of important data would have been backed up at regular intervals prior to the technician visit. Sounds like you dropped the ball there, Joel.

Posted on 08/31/2007 at 2:08:00 AM

 
I can't speak for the others, but I provide a computer repair service at a retail store (not Best Buy), and I don't claim to be the master of everything, but I repair computers almost everyday. My studies? High school only (graduated in 92). I'm not an IT wizard, I'm only 30, but I'm using the knowledge and experience I gathered sin the past 20 years to help people who are having trouble with their computers. I know that it's good to have sales, but what matters the most to me is to help people. I tell them what's going on with their computer and I ask if they want to go ahead and repair it. I'm honest and I don't take advantage of people. Heck, I even suggest uninstalling Norton with the Norton removal tool rather than selling them Norton products! Maybe I'm not a good salesman, but customers are coming back with more computers, and at least in this store I know that I'm not giving our service a bad name. I can't speak for the others. Unfortunately sooner or later a non-experienced gu

Posted on 08/16/2007 at 10:08:00 PM

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